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Theme
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Theme is one of the most fundamental concepts in literary studies, referring to the central ideas or messages that give a work its deeper meaning. Students across introductory composition courses, world literature seminars, and advanced literary analysis classes are regularly asked to identify and interpret theme because it trains close reading and critical thinking. Works like William Blake's "The Lamb," William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily," Edgar Allan Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart," and Gabriel García Márquez's "A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings" appear frequently in these assignments because they carry layered, discussable themes around death, love, society, and human nature.

The papers archived on this topic take a range of approaches. Many focus on single-text analysis, tracing how one theme develops across a short story or poem — as seen in essays on Liliana Hecker's "The Stolen Party," August Wilson's Fences, and Robert Frost's "Out, Out." Others adopt a broader comparative or cultural lens, examining theme across multiple works or situating it within American literature as a whole. Some essays combine thematic analysis with attention to symbolism, while others move toward ethical or societal interpretation, connecting a work's ideas to larger questions about life, class, and identity.

A strong essay on theme opens with a specific, arguable thesis that names the theme and makes a claim about how or why the author develops it. Textual evidence — quoted passages, specific scenes, repeated images — carries the most weight and should be interpreted rather than simply summarized. The most common pitfall is defining a theme too broadly, such as stating only that a work is "about love" without explaining what the text actually argues about love's nature or consequences.

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Essay Doctorate
Human resources affirmative action policies and practices
Working for the Federal Government requires something extra due to the nature of the enterprise. Collective agencies such as the Federal Government are much more strict about rules and regulations dealing with…
Paper Doctorate
Lysistrata: What Could Possibly Be
¶ … Lysistrata: What could possibly be funny about a sex strike undertaken by women on both sides of a war as a There are several points of hilarity in Aristophanes' classic Greek drama, Lysistrata.
Paper Doctorate
Classic Joyce Carol Oates Story
Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Wordsworth, Blake, Shelly and Other Greats of the Romantic Era
The years in which the Romantic Era had its great impact -- roughly 1789 through 1832 -- were years in which there were "intense political, social, and cultural upheavals," according to Professor Shannon Heath at the…
Paper Masters
Overstock.com and Ecommerce Options
Understanding e-commerce is very important, especially for companies that are focused on providing online shopping and ordering to their customers. One of those companies is Overstock.com, which also goes by its…
Essay Doctorate
Societal Themes and Media
Several different themes, narratives and ideas of the society are taken up by the media and presented to the masses in many different ways. In some cases, the purpose behind this adaptation is pure entertainment,…
Paper Undergraduate
Marketing fundamentals and key concepts
This paper is a chapter-by-chapter summary of a marketing textbook on various marketing and promotional issues. Different topics include the difference between advertising and public relations; the purpose of different types of marketing; the benefits and risks of using social media; and the ways in which relationship-building differs from traditional selling.
Essay Doctorate
Ideology, Trauma, Equality: Gender in Nazi Germany and Afterwards
This paper examines the impact of World War Two on gender roles in Germany during and after the war. The paper focuses on three separate areas: ideology, egalitarianism, and trauma. The first is exemplified by Nazi ideas about gender, and offers primary source citations from Alfred Rosenberg and Leni Riefenstahl. The second is examined through the inclusion of women in the German war effort, as a means of examining how 70 years later Germany could produce Angela Merkel. The issue of trauma is covered by considering the mass-rapes that occurred on the German eastern front at the war's end--with an estimated 2 million victims--and examining the effects through a consideration of the East German intellectual Christa Wolf (who was 16 years old in 1945).
Paper Undergraduate
American Dream Corrupted in the Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby is a novel that uses the theme of the American Dream in a number of ways, and it is not a stretch to explain that F. Scott Fitzgerald was showing the dark side of the elusive American Dream.
Paper Doctorate
Changes in people's characteristics across time
Chadha's absorbing first novel depicts a family of first-generation immigrants in upstate New York encountering the difficulties of survival, wanting to belong in a world that looks down on minorities and also longing…